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Women and Feminism: Progressive America. On May 9, 1908, the US Senate rejected a bill that would have established Mother's Day as a national holiday on the grounds that motherhood was too sacred to be demeaned by a day in its honor.
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On May 9, 1908, the US Senate rejected a bill that would have established Mother's Day as a national holiday on the grounds that motherhood was too sacred to be demeaned by a day in its honor.
Just 11 years later, in 1919, the Senate passed the 19th Amendment, giving women the right to vote.
At the dawn of the twentieth century, women activists and their male allies were preaching a new day for women.
What was the relationship between the suffrage movement and other feminist campaigns?Why did the women's movement lose momentum after women got the vote?
"All feminists are suffragists, but not all suffragists are feminists"
In the last half of the nineteenth century, Victorian ideals still held sway in American society, at least among members of the middle and upper classes.
Strict, hierarchical Victorian thought promoted a so-called "cult of true Womanhood," which preached four cardinal virtues for women:
Piety…Advocates believed that women were far more religious and spiritual in nature than men.
Purity…America's women were supposed to be pure of heart, mind, and of course, body.
Submission…Women were supposed to live in a kind of perpetual childhood, passively responding to the actions and decisions of men.
Domesticity…The Industrial Revolution had created a clear division between the public sphere of work and the private sphere of home. Home and hearth, according to the Cult of True Womanhood, became the domain of woman.
Three areas alarmed members of Victorian-era America:* Dress Reform * Education of Women * Women in the Workforce
Dress reform:In 1850, in reaction to the cost and physical restrictiveness of Victorian dress, with its bustles and corsets, Amelia Bloomer and Elizabeth Cady Stanton designed a simple dress that women could wear over "bloomers," which were ankle-length pantaloons.
Education of Women:Many nineteenth-century physicians accepted Darwinism, concluded that women had stopped evolving sooner than men, and, therefore, were less developed mentally and less suited for education.
One physician of the day stated, "Woman has a head almost too small for intellect, but just big enough for love."
Students at work in University of Wisconsin "home economics laboratory"
Women Entering the Workforce:Immigrant women and poor women had no choice but to work as laundresses, servants, and factory help.
Proponents of True Womanhood, however, often demonized women forced to work outside the home.
They argued that working outside the home would give women financial independence from their fathers and husbands and, in turn, undermine the family.
Not everyone went along passively with this the stifling conventions of true womanhood. Well before the Civil War, women began laying the foundation for the modern women's rights movement.
As early as the 1820s, for example, women were active in broad "humanist" movements such as abolition, war relief efforts, and the temperance movement.
Although not focused directly on women's issues, these campaigns allowed women the opportunity to hone the skills required to organize and protest for suffrage and more expansive rights.
The Seneca Falls Convention…organized in 1848by Quakers Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, was the first public gathering in the U.S. to address the rights of women.
One result of the convention was the "Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments."
Modeled on the Declaration of Independence, the "Declaration of Sentiments" indicted American society for keeping women from voting, from owning property, and from having equal access to education and employment.
Nearly 240 people attended the meeting, including such intellectual as Susan B. Anthony and Frederick Douglass.
Encouraged by this first meeting, the new “women's rights movement”held annual conventions through the 1850s.
Many women campaigned for the abolition of slavery, hoping that new political rights for oppressed African-Americans would translate into greater rights for women.
The Fifteenth Amendment…which gave the vote to black men, but not to women, was one point of debate which caused a split in the women's movement.
The National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA) led by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Anthony was the more radical woman's suffrage group.
It accepted only women and opposed the Fifteenth Amendment since it only enfranchised African-American men. The NWSA criticized American society, claiming that focus on the family was the real source of women's inequality in society.
Stanton and Anthony argued that marriage, as it existed, was set up to gratify men and to disempower women.
The American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA) was more moderate in its views than the NWSA.
It allowed men to join and rallied behind the Fifteenth Amendment as a step in the right direction toward greater civil rights for women. Leaders of the AWSA included Julia Ward Howe and Lucy Stone.
Another one of the most outspoken and flamboyant women's rights activists of the day was Victoria Woodhull (1838-1927).
At various times she dabbled in spiritualism, ran a successful brokerage firm, published a newspaper with Marxist leanings, and in 1870, became the first woman to declare herself a candidate for President in 1872.
Anthony and Stanton thought that Woodhull would be an ideal speaker at the 1871 NWSA convention.
They got more than they had bargained for, however, when Woodhull made a ringing speech calling for the overthrow of the U.S. government.
Stated Woodhull, "We mean treasonWe are plotting revolution."
Stanton and Anthony eventually disavowed Woodhull but the associations connection to such radical thought, in fact, severely damaged the organization.